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Take a Stand! High School American History Student Bundle
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Everything your high school American History student needs for a Socratic year.
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Take a Stand!
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Bundle Contents
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Resources
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A Cathy Duffy Top Pick
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Individual Items
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A Crisis of Historical Illiteracy
Many people suffer through history class because they are never challenged to analyze the past on their own. Instead, they are spoon-fed a narrative and told to memorize it. And though they quickly forget most of contents of their course, they do remember one thing: history is boring.
The result of this broken educational model is that America is in a crisis of historical illiteracy. According to a comprehensive survey by The Institute for Citizens & Scholars, only 27% of people under the age of 45 have "a very basic understanding" of history. In the words of esteemed historian David McCullough, Americans are suffering from collective amnesia.
The result of this broken educational model is that America is in a crisis of historical illiteracy. According to a comprehensive survey by The Institute for Citizens & Scholars, only 27% of people under the age of 45 have "a very basic understanding" of history. In the words of esteemed historian David McCullough, Americans are suffering from collective amnesia.
A Socratic Approach to History
The Socratic approach to history is our response to this catastrophe. Instead of focusing on historical content, Socratic teachers empower students to participate in the process of history. In other words, they teach students how to be historians.
When young people are empowered to analyze the past, they develop important critical thinking skills. When they're challenged to take a stand on historical controversies, they put those skills to work developing arguments that are based in evidence. And when they're called to defend their position in a Socratic discussion, they learn to consider historical events from multiple perspectives.
In the end, they learn that history is more than an academic subject. It is a discipline that leads to self-knowledge, and eventually, to wisdom.
When young people are empowered to analyze the past, they develop important critical thinking skills. When they're challenged to take a stand on historical controversies, they put those skills to work developing arguments that are based in evidence. And when they're called to defend their position in a Socratic discussion, they learn to consider historical events from multiple perspectives.
In the end, they learn that history is more than an academic subject. It is a discipline that leads to self-knowledge, and eventually, to wisdom.
Socratic Reasoning Skills
Using the Take a Stand! series, students master critical thinking skills as they learn the following Tools of the Historian:
- Fact or Opinion?
- Judgment
- Supporting Evidence
- Primary or Secondary Source Analysis
- Using Quotes
- Paraphrasing
- Thesis Statement
- Conclusion
- Outline for a One-Paragraph Essay
- Rough Draft for a One-Paragraph Essay
- Taking Notes
- Thesis Statement for a Five Paragraph Essay
- Rough Draft for a Five Paragraph Essay
- Revising
- Documenting Sources in a Text
- Works Cited
- Typing Guidelines
- The Cover Page and Checklist
- Thesis Statement for a Multi-Page Essay
- Counter-argument
- Analyzing Primary Sources
- Cause and Effect
- Compare and Contrast
Comprehensive US History Curriculum
This bundle has everything students need to learn American History through the Socratic discussion. At the beginning of the year, students learn how to be historians. After acquiring the necessary skills, students then complete research in their text and from our online primary source documents. Next, they develop arguments and participate in a Socratic discussion. Finally, students make their case in a persuasive history essay.
- American History, From Columbus Through Modern, Student Edition
- Primary Sources (Free on Our Website)
- A Patriot’s History of the U.S.A.
- Modern US History Go Fish
Socratic Discussion Questions
Using this Socratic history curriculum, students discuss questions including:
- Which branch of the federal government is the strongest?
- Did Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal policies help America, or hurt it?
- Was Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society a success, or a failure?
American History Content
Using our Socratic history curriculum for high school American history, students learn about:
- The American Revolution
- The Declaration of Independence
- Effects on France
- The U.S. Constitution
- Founding the Republic
- The U.S. as a Young Nation
- Westward Expansion
- The Civil War
- Reconstruction
- Immigration
- Industrialization
- The United States Becoming a World Power
- Immigration
- The Role of Religion in American Life
- U.S. Imperialism
- Civil Liberties in the 1920s
- The Great Depression
- The New Deal
- World War II in the Pacific
- The Cold War in the United States
- The Civil Rights Movement
- Nixon and Watergate
- Technology as a Cause for Change
Book Sample
tas_american_student_sample.pdf | |
File Size: | 342 kb |
File Type: |
Classical History Curriculum Review
The Classical Historian is the name for the history curriculum surrounding the Take A Stand! series of teacher guides. These Classical Historian courses teach students how to read with discernment, how to gather information, how to think about and analyze information, and how to discuss and write about what they have studied. They do so in the context of history courses covering different eras. Courses implement classical education strategies such as Socratic discussions and analytical writing. Classical educators will note that the methods used are appropriate for both the dialectic and rhetoric stages.
The Take A Stand! teacher guides are the core element in all courses, and they can be used on their own or within the Classical Historian course bundles. The teacher guides each outline a 32-week course of study.
For junior high students, there are three Take A Stand! guides:
High school students also have guides for three courses available:
A few pages at the beginning of each teacher guide explain the philosophy of the program. The second section of each guide provides practical information such as required course components, time required for lessons and homework, enrichments ideas, and directions for end-of-semester oral presentations. Part three of the guide lays out 32 lessons plans, one for each week of the school year.
Separate student workbooks are essential for students to work through the various assignments in the course.
The Classical Historian's Take A Stand! guides can be used with a broad range of reference resources for historical information, but most parents and teachers prefer using the complete Classical Historian course bundles that incorporate the guides as well as appropriate resource books for each course. There is a bundle for each Take A Stand! guide.
Each Classical Historian bundle has a number of components. Common to each are a Take A Stand! teacher guide, the corresponding Take A Stand! student workbook, and Teaching the Socratic Discussion DVD Curriculum. Each course also has one or more resource books that provide at least some of the historical content for each course.
Each complete course begins with use of Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History DVD Curriculum—a set of three DVDs and a 77-page guide. This set helps parents/teachers and students learn this approach. (While it comes as part of each bundle, it may be purchased on its own.)
On the first DVD, author John De Gree shares some of his background, introduces the program, and explains how it works. The second DVD is an extended version of the first DVD, with additional material directed toward home educators. On the third DVD, “Tools of the Historian,” we watch De Gree working with different homeschool families through some lessons. The guide includes instructions and forms so that you can actually teach your own students through a complete lesson on "The Fall of the Roman Empire," including the composition assignments.
(Parents and teachers who are interested can become certified Classical Historian Teacher's by working through this course and teaching some students. Requirements and instructions are in the guide.)
While the DVDs in the Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History set include demonstrations and explanations of the teaching process, the Ancient, Medieval, and junior high American History bundles each also include a DVD showing John De Gree conducting Socratic discussions through the lessons for each of those respective courses.
DVDs are not professional, but they are very helpful for showing how this approach actually works in homeschool settings.
You might think it redundant to repeat Teaching the Socratic Discussion each year. Some of the basic concepts are repetitive, but each Take-A Stand! teacher guide has students work through Socratic discussions and writing skills using resources and topics from that year’s textbook or resources on a particular historical period. This means that students practice applying skills in entirely new contexts each time.
While the teacher guide provides lesson plans and assignments, the student workbook for each course guides students in their reading and research as well as through discussions and extensive writing activities. Students are presented with very brief statements about a key event in their Take A Stand! book then challenged to research and write in response to a question.
For example, the first lesson in Medieval Civilizations has to do with the fall of the Roman Empire. The "take a stand" question is, "Based on the evidence you researched, what were the two most important reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire?" Three pre-writing forms follow. One is headed "Reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire." A first reason is given as a "freebie" followed by six more blank lines for students to add six more reasons they discover in their reading and research. The second pre-writing activity is headed, "Explain your reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire." Here students use a brief statement to explain each of the reasons they came up with in the first activity. Again, one explanation is supplied then there are lines for the student to add six more explanations. The third activity is a more complicated chart that has the student rate the reasons, ranking them as to relative importance. All of this helps them arrive at their two most important reasons, which they are then asked to defend.
For their research, students might use the history books that come in the Classical Historian bundles or other resources. The more research they do, the more well-developed their information is likely to be. Junior high bundles for Ancient and Medieval periods each include only one additional book: World History Detective (Critical Thinking Co.). These courses have students use the internet for other research. All of the other bundles have at least two source material books. For example, the Modern American History bundle includes A Patriot’s History of the United States and The Patriot’s History Reader (both published by Sentinel).
Originally written for classroom settings, lessons in the Take A Stand! guides direct students to compare their own conclusions with those of classmates and consider whether or not they want to change their own conclusions before writing their papers. Discussion with a parent or tutor can substitute for class interaction, but however you manage it, discussion is essential.
After students have worked through these steps, they are ready to write their essay and pull it all together. They will first write one-paragraph responses then progress up through five-paragraph essays to multi-page essays. The instructions for each of the essays says, "In your essay, include a thesis, evidence, and explain how your evidence supports your thesis."
Essay assignments each have a chart for recording due dates for various assignments. In addition, grading rubric forms are included for the different essays. These can be used by both student and teacher.
Because these skills are taught incrementally and students master them a step at a time, Classical Historian courses are very manageable for students beginning in junior high. Students are given plenty of assistance with skill development and pre-writing activities with a section of "skills assignments" at the back of each Take A Stand! guide as well as through the Teaching the Socratic Discussion lessons. (The author assumes that students already have basic writing skills.) The types of skills addressed in these sections are distinguishing fact and opinion, finding supporting evidence, taking notes, paraphrasing, using quotations, writing a thesis statement, writing a conclusion, outlining the essay, writing a rough draft, documenting sources, and creating a works-cited page. Rough draft and outline forms are included for the various essays. Parents or teachers might use the optional skill assignments as needed for their own students, skipping those that are unnecessary.
All of this sounds like fairly high level work especially for junior high students. However, author John De Gree assures me that he has used these very successfully with junior high students, many of whom were ESL students with very weak knowledge of history. While arguments and essays from some students might be shallow or poorly informed, the learning experience itself still takes them beyond where they would be with only a textbook. Students with a better knowledge base are able to form more complex arguments. If you use these books with high schoolers you should expect more depth of research and argumentation than you would from those in junior high. It's also important to note that assignments gradually become more challenging, eventually requiring the use of at least three sources, then five sources.
One reason why I think the Classical Historian approach works so well is that when students read and research with the questions in mind, they pay much closer attention than when reading simply to cover the material. When they have to analyze information, thinking about cause and effect and relative importance, they have moved to a much deeper level of thinking. Discussing their research and ideas with others forces them to think logically and critically.
The Classical Historian's mission statement says that they are, "dedicated to promoting the American experiment of self-government under law, rooted in its Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman heritage. We believe in American exceptionalism and teach patriotism through all our materials." While this is the philosophy behind the program, Classical Historian resources can be used by those across the religious spectrum because they avoid biases both for and against religion by using a historical inquiry method. The curriculum includes questions that relate to religions without expressing belief or unbelief.
or instance, the final lesson in Ancient Civilizations on the rise of Christianity poses the question, "Why did the Roman Empire change from persecuting Christians at the time of the death of Jesus to supporting Christians by the Fourth Century?" Students might come up with a wide range of answers and opinions depending upon their research resources and parental or teacher directions. Also, remember that the parent or teacher can always add other ideas to those presented in the book. Because of that religious neutrality, the curriculum has been approved for purchase by charter school students.
However, most, but not all of the textbooks and other resources in the bundles, are relatively neutral regarding religion in their viewpoints to make it easier for students to form their own opinions based on information. (Of course, you can use other resources instead of or in addition to those in the bundles.) Two resources might be considered as exceptions in this regard: Lessons for the Young Economist by Robert P. Murphy, used for American Democracy and Economics, is written from an Austrian economics viewpoint and supports limited government intervention, and The Patriot’s History of the United States leans toward a conservative viewpoint both religiously and politically.
Some books as well as the Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History DVD set are used for more than one course, so you need not purchase a complete bundle for each course after the first year. Permission is generously granted for a parent or teacher to make copies of pages from any of the Classical Historian courses for their family or class group.
You might want to check out card games and memory games that the Classical Historian has created. These can be used with the courses reviewed here as well as with most other courses for U.S. history, world history, and government.
In summary, The Classical Historian courses are proving to be very popular among homeschoolers who want to engage in discussions with their children, as well as among those who want their children to both know historical information and know how to analyze and write about that information.
From Cathy Duffy
Last Updated: 10 March 2020
The Take A Stand! teacher guides are the core element in all courses, and they can be used on their own or within the Classical Historian course bundles. The teacher guides each outline a 32-week course of study.
For junior high students, there are three Take A Stand! guides:
- Ancient Civilizations
- Medieval Civilizations
- American History from Columbus to 1900
High school students also have guides for three courses available:
- Modern World History - opens with a review of western political thought then covers the "Age of Revolution" from the 1600s through the Cold War
- Modern American History - covers Reconstruction then selected topics up through "Nixon and Watergate" and "Technology as a Cause for Change"
- American Democracy and Economics - a classical approach to government and economics
A few pages at the beginning of each teacher guide explain the philosophy of the program. The second section of each guide provides practical information such as required course components, time required for lessons and homework, enrichments ideas, and directions for end-of-semester oral presentations. Part three of the guide lays out 32 lessons plans, one for each week of the school year.
Separate student workbooks are essential for students to work through the various assignments in the course.
The Classical Historian's Take A Stand! guides can be used with a broad range of reference resources for historical information, but most parents and teachers prefer using the complete Classical Historian course bundles that incorporate the guides as well as appropriate resource books for each course. There is a bundle for each Take A Stand! guide.
Each Classical Historian bundle has a number of components. Common to each are a Take A Stand! teacher guide, the corresponding Take A Stand! student workbook, and Teaching the Socratic Discussion DVD Curriculum. Each course also has one or more resource books that provide at least some of the historical content for each course.
Each complete course begins with use of Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History DVD Curriculum—a set of three DVDs and a 77-page guide. This set helps parents/teachers and students learn this approach. (While it comes as part of each bundle, it may be purchased on its own.)
On the first DVD, author John De Gree shares some of his background, introduces the program, and explains how it works. The second DVD is an extended version of the first DVD, with additional material directed toward home educators. On the third DVD, “Tools of the Historian,” we watch De Gree working with different homeschool families through some lessons. The guide includes instructions and forms so that you can actually teach your own students through a complete lesson on "The Fall of the Roman Empire," including the composition assignments.
(Parents and teachers who are interested can become certified Classical Historian Teacher's by working through this course and teaching some students. Requirements and instructions are in the guide.)
While the DVDs in the Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History set include demonstrations and explanations of the teaching process, the Ancient, Medieval, and junior high American History bundles each also include a DVD showing John De Gree conducting Socratic discussions through the lessons for each of those respective courses.
DVDs are not professional, but they are very helpful for showing how this approach actually works in homeschool settings.
You might think it redundant to repeat Teaching the Socratic Discussion each year. Some of the basic concepts are repetitive, but each Take-A Stand! teacher guide has students work through Socratic discussions and writing skills using resources and topics from that year’s textbook or resources on a particular historical period. This means that students practice applying skills in entirely new contexts each time.
While the teacher guide provides lesson plans and assignments, the student workbook for each course guides students in their reading and research as well as through discussions and extensive writing activities. Students are presented with very brief statements about a key event in their Take A Stand! book then challenged to research and write in response to a question.
For example, the first lesson in Medieval Civilizations has to do with the fall of the Roman Empire. The "take a stand" question is, "Based on the evidence you researched, what were the two most important reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire?" Three pre-writing forms follow. One is headed "Reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire." A first reason is given as a "freebie" followed by six more blank lines for students to add six more reasons they discover in their reading and research. The second pre-writing activity is headed, "Explain your reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire." Here students use a brief statement to explain each of the reasons they came up with in the first activity. Again, one explanation is supplied then there are lines for the student to add six more explanations. The third activity is a more complicated chart that has the student rate the reasons, ranking them as to relative importance. All of this helps them arrive at their two most important reasons, which they are then asked to defend.
For their research, students might use the history books that come in the Classical Historian bundles or other resources. The more research they do, the more well-developed their information is likely to be. Junior high bundles for Ancient and Medieval periods each include only one additional book: World History Detective (Critical Thinking Co.). These courses have students use the internet for other research. All of the other bundles have at least two source material books. For example, the Modern American History bundle includes A Patriot’s History of the United States and The Patriot’s History Reader (both published by Sentinel).
Originally written for classroom settings, lessons in the Take A Stand! guides direct students to compare their own conclusions with those of classmates and consider whether or not they want to change their own conclusions before writing their papers. Discussion with a parent or tutor can substitute for class interaction, but however you manage it, discussion is essential.
After students have worked through these steps, they are ready to write their essay and pull it all together. They will first write one-paragraph responses then progress up through five-paragraph essays to multi-page essays. The instructions for each of the essays says, "In your essay, include a thesis, evidence, and explain how your evidence supports your thesis."
Essay assignments each have a chart for recording due dates for various assignments. In addition, grading rubric forms are included for the different essays. These can be used by both student and teacher.
Because these skills are taught incrementally and students master them a step at a time, Classical Historian courses are very manageable for students beginning in junior high. Students are given plenty of assistance with skill development and pre-writing activities with a section of "skills assignments" at the back of each Take A Stand! guide as well as through the Teaching the Socratic Discussion lessons. (The author assumes that students already have basic writing skills.) The types of skills addressed in these sections are distinguishing fact and opinion, finding supporting evidence, taking notes, paraphrasing, using quotations, writing a thesis statement, writing a conclusion, outlining the essay, writing a rough draft, documenting sources, and creating a works-cited page. Rough draft and outline forms are included for the various essays. Parents or teachers might use the optional skill assignments as needed for their own students, skipping those that are unnecessary.
All of this sounds like fairly high level work especially for junior high students. However, author John De Gree assures me that he has used these very successfully with junior high students, many of whom were ESL students with very weak knowledge of history. While arguments and essays from some students might be shallow or poorly informed, the learning experience itself still takes them beyond where they would be with only a textbook. Students with a better knowledge base are able to form more complex arguments. If you use these books with high schoolers you should expect more depth of research and argumentation than you would from those in junior high. It's also important to note that assignments gradually become more challenging, eventually requiring the use of at least three sources, then five sources.
One reason why I think the Classical Historian approach works so well is that when students read and research with the questions in mind, they pay much closer attention than when reading simply to cover the material. When they have to analyze information, thinking about cause and effect and relative importance, they have moved to a much deeper level of thinking. Discussing their research and ideas with others forces them to think logically and critically.
The Classical Historian's mission statement says that they are, "dedicated to promoting the American experiment of self-government under law, rooted in its Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman heritage. We believe in American exceptionalism and teach patriotism through all our materials." While this is the philosophy behind the program, Classical Historian resources can be used by those across the religious spectrum because they avoid biases both for and against religion by using a historical inquiry method. The curriculum includes questions that relate to religions without expressing belief or unbelief.
or instance, the final lesson in Ancient Civilizations on the rise of Christianity poses the question, "Why did the Roman Empire change from persecuting Christians at the time of the death of Jesus to supporting Christians by the Fourth Century?" Students might come up with a wide range of answers and opinions depending upon their research resources and parental or teacher directions. Also, remember that the parent or teacher can always add other ideas to those presented in the book. Because of that religious neutrality, the curriculum has been approved for purchase by charter school students.
However, most, but not all of the textbooks and other resources in the bundles, are relatively neutral regarding religion in their viewpoints to make it easier for students to form their own opinions based on information. (Of course, you can use other resources instead of or in addition to those in the bundles.) Two resources might be considered as exceptions in this regard: Lessons for the Young Economist by Robert P. Murphy, used for American Democracy and Economics, is written from an Austrian economics viewpoint and supports limited government intervention, and The Patriot’s History of the United States leans toward a conservative viewpoint both religiously and politically.
Some books as well as the Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History DVD set are used for more than one course, so you need not purchase a complete bundle for each course after the first year. Permission is generously granted for a parent or teacher to make copies of pages from any of the Classical Historian courses for their family or class group.
You might want to check out card games and memory games that the Classical Historian has created. These can be used with the courses reviewed here as well as with most other courses for U.S. history, world history, and government.
In summary, The Classical Historian courses are proving to be very popular among homeschoolers who want to engage in discussions with their children, as well as among those who want their children to both know historical information and know how to analyze and write about that information.
From Cathy Duffy
Last Updated: 10 March 2020
FAQ
1. Should the teacher or homeschool educator start with the Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History Seminar?
The Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History Seminar prepares classroom and homeschool educators to teach History using a Socratic approach. If you have never taught using the Socratic Method, we recommend starting with the seminar.
2. Will this curriculum work in a homeschool history class with 1 student, or in a classroom setting of 30?
This classical history curriculum has been successfully used in both situations. In a homeschool setting with one student, the parent challenges the student to develop arguments for both sides of a Socratic discussion question. In a classroom or small group setting, students debate and discuss with one another and the teacher acts as a facilitator.
3. How do the history text and the primary source documents fit in with the Take a Stand! student book? Are they integrated?
Yes. The Take a Stand! Teacher Edition contains detailed lesson plans that explain when, in each lesson, to read the history text, what to assign for homework, what to do in each lesson, and when to read the primary source documents. The entire curriculum is seamlessly integrated. This classical history curriculum has been refined over the course of a decade of use in various settings.
4. About how much time should I allot for History work each lesson/day/week? I know each student is different, but a general timeframe could be very helpful for planning purposes.
In a homeschool setting, we recommend that lessons take place once a week for one hour and a half. In the first half hour, play the Classical Historian Go Fish game that most closely aligns with the curriculum. Begin with the go fish game, and then switch to the “collect the cards” version of the game, which teaches historical facts, chronology, and inductive thinking skills. Then, plan under one hour for the lesson.
In our Online Academy discussion courses, we meet for 30 50-minute lessons each year. In a classroom setting, plan on interspersing the 30 lessons throughout the year. One teacher shared that she enjoyed teaching this curriculum once per week where she had a Socratic Discussion day. Another teacher shared she enjoyed teaching this in chunks, such as one week every six weeks or so.
For teachers who will be assigning essays, our Teaching the Socratic Discussion DVD Seminar goes into great detail about timing related to first drafts and revisions.
5. What is the difference between the high school and middle school levels?
In our high school history curriculum, the readings are longer and more complicated, and the Socratic discussion questions are more complex.
6. How much time should I plan on having my child do the homework?
If the student is not writing any essay, junior high students can usually complete the homework anywhere from 30 minutes to one hour per week, and high school students from two to five hours per week, depending on their reading skills. If essays are assigned. it really depends on the length of the essay (one-paragraph, five-paragraph, or more) and the age and skill of the student.
7. I see the middle school history curriculum comes with Socratic Discussion DVDs specific to the curriculum. How do I use those?
Teachers may use our recorded Socratic discussions in a variety of ways. Educators can watch the discussions for further teacher training, or they can be shown to students after they have had their own Socratic discussion. Students can use these recordings as an “answer key” for their own discussions. Additionally, students could watch these before they have their own discussions and take notes to help them prepare.
8. I don’t know much about history. How can I teach this?
We’ve all had history teachers who know “everything” and they were poor teachers. For teachers of the junior high curriculum, you can read the history along with your child and it would take about 10–20 minutes a week of reading. For high school, it would require from one to two hours per week of reading.
9. Do I need to complete every single thing that is recommended in the Teacher Edition?
No. In the end, the teacher has complete authority to make judgement calls based on the situation and what the think is best. We recommend that all students read the entire history text and engage in as many Socratic discussions as possible. We planned the curriculum to include essays for each chapter because persuasive writing is an important component of good scholarship. However, teachers may use their judgement as to how much work they want to plan for their students.
10. How does this curriculum work and how is it unique?
Classical Historian teaches students to think independently, read, write, and speak effectively, AND learn history. We use a four-step method:
1. Students learn the Tools of the Historian.
2. Students are challenged with Socratic discussion questions.
3. Students research a variety of primary and secondary sources.
4. Students engage in a Socratic discussion.
For more specifics, visit our Methods Page.
Still have a question?
Email John De Gree and he will be happy to answer your questions.
The Teaching the Socratic Discussion in History Seminar prepares classroom and homeschool educators to teach History using a Socratic approach. If you have never taught using the Socratic Method, we recommend starting with the seminar.
2. Will this curriculum work in a homeschool history class with 1 student, or in a classroom setting of 30?
This classical history curriculum has been successfully used in both situations. In a homeschool setting with one student, the parent challenges the student to develop arguments for both sides of a Socratic discussion question. In a classroom or small group setting, students debate and discuss with one another and the teacher acts as a facilitator.
3. How do the history text and the primary source documents fit in with the Take a Stand! student book? Are they integrated?
Yes. The Take a Stand! Teacher Edition contains detailed lesson plans that explain when, in each lesson, to read the history text, what to assign for homework, what to do in each lesson, and when to read the primary source documents. The entire curriculum is seamlessly integrated. This classical history curriculum has been refined over the course of a decade of use in various settings.
4. About how much time should I allot for History work each lesson/day/week? I know each student is different, but a general timeframe could be very helpful for planning purposes.
In a homeschool setting, we recommend that lessons take place once a week for one hour and a half. In the first half hour, play the Classical Historian Go Fish game that most closely aligns with the curriculum. Begin with the go fish game, and then switch to the “collect the cards” version of the game, which teaches historical facts, chronology, and inductive thinking skills. Then, plan under one hour for the lesson.
In our Online Academy discussion courses, we meet for 30 50-minute lessons each year. In a classroom setting, plan on interspersing the 30 lessons throughout the year. One teacher shared that she enjoyed teaching this curriculum once per week where she had a Socratic Discussion day. Another teacher shared she enjoyed teaching this in chunks, such as one week every six weeks or so.
For teachers who will be assigning essays, our Teaching the Socratic Discussion DVD Seminar goes into great detail about timing related to first drafts and revisions.
5. What is the difference between the high school and middle school levels?
In our high school history curriculum, the readings are longer and more complicated, and the Socratic discussion questions are more complex.
6. How much time should I plan on having my child do the homework?
If the student is not writing any essay, junior high students can usually complete the homework anywhere from 30 minutes to one hour per week, and high school students from two to five hours per week, depending on their reading skills. If essays are assigned. it really depends on the length of the essay (one-paragraph, five-paragraph, or more) and the age and skill of the student.
7. I see the middle school history curriculum comes with Socratic Discussion DVDs specific to the curriculum. How do I use those?
Teachers may use our recorded Socratic discussions in a variety of ways. Educators can watch the discussions for further teacher training, or they can be shown to students after they have had their own Socratic discussion. Students can use these recordings as an “answer key” for their own discussions. Additionally, students could watch these before they have their own discussions and take notes to help them prepare.
8. I don’t know much about history. How can I teach this?
We’ve all had history teachers who know “everything” and they were poor teachers. For teachers of the junior high curriculum, you can read the history along with your child and it would take about 10–20 minutes a week of reading. For high school, it would require from one to two hours per week of reading.
9. Do I need to complete every single thing that is recommended in the Teacher Edition?
No. In the end, the teacher has complete authority to make judgement calls based on the situation and what the think is best. We recommend that all students read the entire history text and engage in as many Socratic discussions as possible. We planned the curriculum to include essays for each chapter because persuasive writing is an important component of good scholarship. However, teachers may use their judgement as to how much work they want to plan for their students.
10. How does this curriculum work and how is it unique?
Classical Historian teaches students to think independently, read, write, and speak effectively, AND learn history. We use a four-step method:
1. Students learn the Tools of the Historian.
2. Students are challenged with Socratic discussion questions.
3. Students research a variety of primary and secondary sources.
4. Students engage in a Socratic discussion.
For more specifics, visit our Methods Page.
Still have a question?
Email John De Gree and he will be happy to answer your questions.